4 Working together towards TRIPS Thomas Cottier1 Introduction The negotiations on IP during the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations of the GATT (1986–94) were able to build upon a large body of existing law, both international and domestic. The main disciplines and notions of IP protection were already well established at the inception of the negotiations in 1986, with the adoption of the Ministerial Declaration in Punta del Este and its compromise that meant that negotiations would be conducted only on so-called trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights. The Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 1883, and the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works of 1886 – both amounting to the very first multilateral agreements in the field of international economic law, long before the advent of the GATT in 1947 – provided the underpinnings in international law. More recent conventions, in particular the International Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations (Rome Convention) of 1961 and the more recent Washington Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated Circuits, adopted in 1989 but which never entered into force, added to these foundations. In domestic law, IP protection amounts to a mature field of commercial law in industrialized countries. This body of law strongly informed the IPR negotiations in the Uruguay Round. In addition, those engaged in the effort were able to benefit from extensive experience in the field of competition policy in these countries, in particular the experience of the United States (US) and the European Communities (EC) – later the European Union (EU) – which was one of the tools to curb excessive recourse to exclusive rights enabling dominant market positions and risk of abuse of these rights. To some extent, building the TRIPS Agreement was an effort to bring these prior agreements and disciplines into the realm of the GATT and trade law and to further refine and expand them to global law, yet without seeking full harmonization. It 80 Thomas Cottier was also an effort to extend the application of IP rules and safeguards to new and emerging economies and to extend established principles of domestic law to this group of countries. Patenting pharmaceuticals and chemicals is a case in point. It was one of the main objectives of industrialized countries. It was certainly the main goal for Switzerland, given its strong pharmaceutical and chemical industry, which is one of the pillars of its export industry. To a considerable extent, however, it was also a matter of introducing new disciplines and of seeking new ground. For example, relying upon protection against unfair competition, new disciplines on geographical indications (GIs) and the protection of undisclosed information emerged and were adopted. Foremost, negotiations developed novel disciplines on enforcing IPRs, which had previously been completely absent from international law. The provisions on fair and equitable procedures, addressing civil, administrative and penal provisions, amount to the first GATT and WTO agreement on regulatory convergence. Based upon the traditions of Anglo-American law and continental European law, a set of procedural requirements and obligations were negotiated that were entirely new to public international law. The results achieved exceeded the much more modest expectations that were held at the outset of the process. The concept of minimal standards reminds us of these modest beginnings. It is somewhat at odds with the high level of standards achieved by the end of the negotiations and which today is increasingly being questioned from a trade and competition policy angle. The negotiations produced an impressive set of detailed rules and established the base code for international IP for decades to come. In the 20 years since its adoption, the Agreement has faced much criticism for its uniform and detailed high standards of protection, which are largely applicable irrespective of the levels of social and economic development and the needs of developing countries. The debate on access to essential drugs, leading to waivers and modifications of the provisions on compulsory licensing, or the debate on appropriate levels of protection for goods in transit, show that the quest for a proper balance and calibration of IPRs has not ended, but was just opened up with the adoption of the TRIPS Agreement in 1995. The forum shift towards preferential agreements in recent years, adding additional standards of increased IPR protection (TRIPS plus) shows that the battle is far from won. It takes place today mainly in other fora on the basis of a very substantial TRIPS Agreement with largely universal and uniform standards different from the philosophy of progressive advancement (in this case, progressive liberalization) otherwise found in the GATT and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). Working together towards TRIPS 81 The reasons for this remarkable, albeit controversial, result are manifold. It has been argued that the outcome is mainly due to the effort of private lobbies, in particular in the United States.2 While these efforts were critical, in particular at the outset, they alone do not explain the results achieved. In hindsight, the geopolitical changes of 1989, with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union, changed the rules of the game and countries were obliged to turn to market economy precepts, including appropriate levels of IPRs, in order to attract foreign direct investment, which was much needed at the time. It was the time of “the end of history” (as stated by Francis Fukuyama). Progress made in laying new foundations for liberalizing textiles, services and agriculture offered internal, albeit eventually unsuccessful, balances within the GATT during the negotiations and greater willingness to engage in negotiations on the part of developing countries. But in addition to these endemic factors, and perhaps more importantly, there were a number of endogenous factors which allowed the negotiations to move forward. It is to these that I turn in this chapter commemorating the twentieth birthday of the TRIPS Agreement. They relate to the process of mutual learning, the building of mutual trust, and the negotiating techniques used to build a common and comprehensive treaty text. While the literature discussing the substance and the implications of the TRIPS Agreement is vast,3 much less has been written about the process by which the Agreement actually came about.4 The learning process The work of the Negotiating Group 11 assigned to trade-related IPRs (TRIPS) on the basis of the Punta del Este Declaration, at its inception and during the first years, may be well-characterized as a dialogue de sourds (a dialogue of the deaf). Discussions were based on introducing basic interests. Developed countries, led by the United States, and eventually joined by the EC, Japan and Switzerland, focused on the need for enhanced protection and the implications of insufficient protection observed around the world. In an early submission, Switzerland, for example, argued in favour of a strong linkage between trade and IPRs. “Proper protection of property is an essential precondition for trade at both national and international levels. In other words, if property is not protected, trade cannot expand and thrive.”5 Developing countries, on the other hand, stressed the risks of monopolization, the resulting South-to-North transfers and the detrimental effects on the building of their own technology base. Neither camp was able to provide solid evidence in support of its views. They were essentially dominated by doctrines adopted and developed in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation 82 Thomas Cottier and Development (OECD), and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), respectively. Early proposals made the case for establishing IPRs in the trading system, or argued on the other hand for the need to minimize the effect of such rules in defence of domestic policy space and the need for flexibility commensurate with levels of social and economic development. Eventually, engagement and discussions began. Many of the trade officials and diplomats assigned to the topic were new to IPRs, as the field was new in the context of the GATT, beyond unsuccessful discussions on combating counterfeiting and piracy held towards the end of the Tokyo Round. It was only at a later stage, if at all, that these officials were accompanied by specialists from their capitals. The Negotiating Group 11 was required to engage in a mutual learning process. This was a matter of becoming fully acquainted with the intricacies of IP and the various forms of protection, and with their functions and implications for the economy and international trade. But, most of all, it was a matter of fully understanding the interests and needs of others with a view to creating a common foundation upon which negotiations could eventually take place. It was here that I learned about the particular preoccupations of contracting parties, for example those with a strong generics industry, or the fear of abuse of rights, or the need to combine enhanced protection with enhanced transfer of technology and job creation. It was here that I learned about the importance of bringing about a proper balance while defending Switzerland’s core interests, which lay mainly in the pharmaceutical and
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